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Senate to Analyze Vote System
By WES GREGORY
A report analyzing the system of electing ASSC Sen-ators-at-large is expected to dominate tomorrow night’s I regular meeting of the ASSC Senate.
The report, which will be presented by Senator Joan i Sparling, will be the result of a survey conducted by the, Elections Investigating Committee into the feasibility ofi continuing the present preference method of electing the, nine Senators-at-Large.
At present. Senators are elected according to the Hare Proportional system of voting which involves the! transference of votes from candidate to candidate until1 nine office seekers receive enough votes to win.
Two meetings ago the Senate ordered its committee to study the system and possibly offer alternatives to it.
ASSC Secretary Barbara Malone will present a report of the campaign she waged in behalf of Hungarian stu-dent-refugees.
Together with other student leaders, Mrs. Malone collected nearly S1000 and secured signatures on 400 protest petitions during the course of her campaign.
The money was sent to aid Hungarian refugees through the auspices of World University Service, working in conjunction with CARE.
The Senate will again hear of the doings of- the newly-organized Trojan Host Committee.
Made up ol eight student leaders, the group will be the official university welcoming committee for visiting athletic teams and student leaders from out-of-town colleges and universities.
Vi Jameson, ASSC vice president, is chairman of the group. She plans to present a progress report of the new Senate committee.
Homecoming Chairman Stan Miller will present a partial report on Homecoming — the expenses involved, things accomplished and a general survey of this year’s Homecoming celebration.
Campus groups which have not turned in organiza-! tion reports to the Senate Recognitions Committee will be refused recognition of the student body.
Committee Chairman Dale Zeigler announced that noon tomorrow is the final deadline for these reports to be turned in to the Dean of Students Office in the Student Union.
After heated debate on this issue, the Senate voted at the last meeting to extend the deadline until tomorrow for the reports.
ASSC President Carl Terzian declared that he would not tolerate additional delay concerning this question.
“I will not entertain another motion to postpone the deadline for these reports,” he said.
Two resolutions will receive Senate consideration tomorrow.
One, by Senator Walt Williams, will express the Senate’s disfavor of conditions in Doheny Memorial Library and will accompany recommendation that the Adminis-I
tration investigate the entire question of poor library service.
This action will be the result of a poll taken by the Daily Trojan of student reaction to present library conditions. Students expressed their disappointment with the library and their disgust for its system of loaning books.
International Relations President Glen Hollinger will present a resolution commending Mrs. Malone for her efforts in the campaign for Hungarian relief.
During the recess Terzian will play a recording made of his speech on desegregation at last summer’s National Students Association Convention.
Terzian’s speech has been recorded along with other* outstanding orations of the meeting and sent to 250 colleges and universities both here and abroad.
The student body president will also give a report of his administration’s accomplishments thus far. This will be the first time in Senate history that such a report has been given.
Southern
DAI LY
TROJAN
VOL. XIVIII
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1956
NO. 46
You Can Win Big Dough; Draw DT Safety Cartoons
$100 Prize Offered Top Cartoonist
One hundred dollars can be garnered by some SC student who has the ability to draw cartoons.
During the week of Dec. 10 to 14, the Daily Trojan will be running cartoons, editorials and features on traffic safety and
accident prevention along with the regular daily campus news and features.
These editions will be sent to the College Newspaper Contest on Safe Driving, sponsored annually by Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Co., for cash prizes.
The past three out of four years the DT has taken first place.
First prize for the winning cartoon is S100. All SC students are invited to enter, not only to try to add the $100 to their pocketbook, but also to aid the DT in winning another prize in this annual contest among college newspapers.
Cartoons must be submitted by Dec. 5 to City Editor David , Henley, 432 SU.
Rowites Team Up to Present 'Night on Row’
Complete participation by every social sorority and fraternity at SC will highlight the first annual “International Night on the Row” Wednesday night, Dec. 12.
The “Night on the Row” will find a small group of foreign students at each house for dinner and an informal get acquainted session. The foreign students will contribute to the dinner by bringing a dish of their native land.
According to Maryanne Hamniat, foreign student activities coordinator for the ASSC Social Committee, the dinner is being developed as a result of the highly successful exchange dinners held last year at four houses.
All foreign students who would like to participate in the first annual International night are asked to sign-up for the dinner in the Foreign Student Adviser's office, SU 322 before Friday.
10 to Represent Israel for Troy
WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP
Russ Puppet Asserts Nagy Exiled Because of Communist Murders
BUL )AP1 EST (UP)—Rusj Uan-
backed Hi! insarian Premier Ja-
nos Kadar said last night that
former prc mier Imre Nagy was
exiled luse he allowed the
nmrdci “scores of Commun-
ists.” I aid Nag\ would 1 lave
to :>ta} some t t of the country lor
Kada id the former premier
might be killed by “prov oca-
teurs” if hc returned to Hungary
and th< me would be at tri but-
ed 1o the government. But hc
gave i lositive indicatior i of
Nagy's pres sent whereabouts.
Kada irV statements were the
first olTir ial explanation of
Nagy's ippeararice since tht
govern* announced he had
gone t 0 Ri omania “at his own
request
Kada r m lade the explana tion
In a 3 0-mi nute broadcast < jver
Radio 1 Buds ip2st in reply to de-
Tnands froi ti Hungary's st rike
leaders a face-to-face m eet-
ing wit h N ngy to see for th em-
selves w lie ther he really i s a
free ir tan as 1he Common lists
The Budapest W'orkers Council, claiming to represent 65 per cent of the striking miners and factory workers throughout the country, insisted on a conference with Nagy, their own press, their own workers ‘militia" and distribution of western Red Cross aid to workers.
Kadar said in his broadcast that Nagy had not loft Hungary forever but would be gone “for some time.” He reiterated promises that the former premier would not be pu« on trial.
The puppet premier said Nagy was pushed further and furl her to the right h\ the counter revolutionaries lie tween Oct. 30 and Nov. 3.
“Nagy committed an unfor- ^
giveable crime when, as a result of his lack of ability, he tolerated the murder of scores of Communists by the reactionaries," Kadar said.
“What is worse, he legalized the crimes with his na.ne," he added.
Kadar said Nagy should have resigned as premier at that time, but instead he called for a new uprising. Then, he said. Nagy packed his baggage and hid out in the Yugoslav Embassy.
“By this action, he left Hungarian territory and demonstrated that he did not want to have anything to do with the Hungarian cabinet." Kadar said.
He said Nagy subsequently informed the government through diplomatic channels that he wanted to go abroad.
* * *
LONDON — (IP) — The British goxernmcnt today re-jwtod parliamentary demands that its troops remain in the Suez Canal /.one tu protect British civilians threatened with “rniel and inhuman'’ expulsion hy Egypt.
The British Foreign Office turned down the conservative demands as the Fnited Nations rushed an air-sea built-up of its emergency police force designed to take over as fast as possible from Anglo-French and Israeli occupying forces.
In Port Said, Norwegian troop*, of the F.N. Police Force went on patrol duty In the first active move to replace British and French occupation forces and speed their withdrawal from Egypt.
Canadian Air Force transports took over an expanded airlift that flew 99 more l’.N. soldiers and tons of arms and equipment into the Suez area, j
In Cairo. F.N. Commander Maj. Gen. E. I.. M. Burns announced plans for hundreds of other troops to arrive by sea at Port Said. Burns said he was moving his command headquarters lo the canal zone, where some 1,300 international troops were already gathered for service.
In Port Said. Anglo-French Field Commander Lt. Gen. Sir Hugh Stockwell told newsmen:
“We are working on plans for a withdrawal just as actively as we did for the capture of the Sue/..”
Demands for Anglo-French retaliatory action mounted following widespread reports that an estimated 13.000 Britons, 6.000 French and 50,000 Jewish residents of Egypt hail been ordered expelled.
But British Minister of State Allan Noble turned down calls in the House of Commons tliat Britain retaliate by ousting Egyptians from England and keeping occupation forces in the canal /.one.
“I am sure the House and the country would not wish us to meet barbarism with barbarism,*’ Noble said.
Nohle said, however, the British Foreign Secretary had made the “strongest possible representations’* over the expulsion threat to C.N. Secretary General Dad Mammarsk-jold and the Egyptian goxern-ment.
Noble reiterated Majority Leader R. A. Butler’s statement last week that British forces will withdraw as soon as sufflcien F.N. forces move into the Suez zone.
* * *
BERLIN — <UP> The Russians turned hack a west-bound British train at Germany's iron-
curtain norder today in an ominous renewal ol travel curbs like those that started the Soviet blockade of Berlin in 1948.
An American train headed for Berlin was allowed to pass alter a two-hour delay at the border, but only when it appeared the U.S. Army had surrendered to Soviet demands.
No one would say officially just what the Russians are up to, but it appeared they are challenging the right ol the western allies to carry civilians on the trains they operate between Berlin and the west.
British trains were delayed at the border twice last week, and it was reported then that the Russians were insisting that only soldiers, sailors and airmen had the right to ride the allied trains.
United Press Staff Correspondent Ernest J. Cramer was put off the American train today, apparently by Soviet demand.
The train commander told Cramer he would have to leave | tbe train at Marienborn, the So- j viet border check-point, because only servicemen could travel across Soviet Germany to en- | circled Berlin.
The UP correspondent, who was traveling on army orders,
' pointed out that State Depart- j ment officials, newsmen and other Americans accredited to the army in Germany have been riding the allied trains ever since the war.
“That was a mistake," the train commander said. He would give no further details.
British officials said their train was turned back after it had traveled lit) miles across i Soviet-held territory to Marienborn because of "new documen- : tation procedures.” They would give no further details.
Psychological Tests to Tell Trojan Futures
Selecting one job from the 30.000 clearly differentiated types can be quite confusing to j discussion
the college student about to go j weapons and radiation damage out into the world and earn a
Scientist To View Radiation
Claims Atom War Could Destroy Man
By LEONA GOLDSTEIN
Radiation effects from an all-
out nuclear war may mean a death warrant for mankind, according to Dr. James C. Warf of the chemistry department.
Dr. W’arf will discuss his views in a panel discussion on “The Truth About Radiation Damage" Friday at 8 p.m. at the Los Angeles First Unitarian Church Public Forum, 2936 W. 8th St.
Appearing with Professor Warf be Dr. Linus Pauling, Noble Prize winner in 1933 and chairman of the Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering at the California Institute of Technology. Dr. Franklin Stahl, research fellow In biology at Caltech, will complete the panel.
Dangerous After-Effects
The significance of radiation to human beings, born and unborn, will be highlighted at the Testing of nuclear
Openings Will Close On Friday Afternoon
A trip to Palo Alto is the prize offered to 10 SC students who are interested in international affairs—and particularly in Israel, which SC will represent at a model United Nations convention this spring.
Applications are now being taken for delegates to the
| annual Model UN Convention to
DISTRICT 29
Indian Born Congressman To Give Talk
be held at Stanford University, April 10 through 14, next semester.
Deadline for applying for membership on the delegation is Friday at 3 p.m. All students— both graduate and undergraduate—are eligible to apply for the trip.
Blanks Available
Application blanks, which can be secured in 218 SU. should be returned to that office when completed and placed in IR President Glen Hollinger’s mailbox.
living.
Should hc be a clerk or a salesman? A mattress stuffer or a research biologist?
Dr. Alfred Jacobs, associate
to humans in a nuclear war w ill be covered.
Atomic blasts offer dangerous results, according to Dr. Warf. “The immediate effect may be physical damage, but the long range possibilities are even more
professor of psychology and sup- serious. These include patholog-ervisor of vocational guidance, jcaj reaetion to non-reproductive said yesterday that the psycho!- tissue arui genetic damage.” cgv department has arranged
the sreond eductional and vo- ! He asserted that after a blast.
to be radioactive strotium 90 falls to
cational battery of tests given to students at a reduced rate.
Testing Time
The tests will be given Saturday, Dec. 8. at 9 a.m. in the Psychological Service Center,
the earth from the stratosphere. It deposits in plants from which it is eventually taken in by humans.
Division Among Scientists
“Since it’s very similar in
915 W. 37th PI. The charge for1 structure to calcium,” he said, students will be $12. j ‘‘strotium becomes deposited
— . . , j, „ along with calcium in the bones.” Interested students should call i °
‘ ' . , - , r, • J He stressed that this was highly
the Psychological Service Cen-<* , .
ter, extension 516.
to make reservations. No more than 50 will be able to take the tests.
The psychology department has given educational and vocational tests for many years, hut up to last year they were for one individual at a time.
The vocational testing process costs $25 for students and $35 for non-students. However, when many students complained last year that they wanted to take the tests but couldn’t afford the high price, the psychology department set up the testing process so that many students could take it at the same time at a lower cost.
Alone and in Groups
According to Dr. Jacobs, the tests last year were very sue- j cessful and 40 students took them. He said that the department still maintains the individual testing in addition to the group testing.
Tbe group tests Dec. 8 will ; last from 9 in the morning to 4 i
dangerous since the foreign deposits cause bone tumors, leukemia and other cancerous growths.
Geneticists are divided as to whether nuclear testing is significantly dangerous to human be-(Continued on Page 4)
Blue Key Meet To Hear Berkes
Dr. Ross N. Berkes, associate professor of the School of International Relations and a recent returnee from a year’s study in England, will be the speaker for tonight’s semi-monthly Blue Key meeting.
Discussing ‘‘A Contrast Between the Students of England and SC,” Dr. Berkes will review his experiences with the Royal Institute of International Affairs. During his stay in England, he worked closely with English universities while doing research on British foreign pol-
SC students and faculty members yesterday were invited to hear an address by Indian-born Dalip Saund, who recently defeated famous aviatrix Jacqueline Cochran Odium as congressman in the 29th District.
Saund. justice of the peace in Westmoreland, a small San Bernardino County community, will speak tomorrow night at 8:15 at the Warner Avenue School Auditorium, 615 Holmbv Ave., in West Los Angeles. Admission is free.
Saund. born in Punjab, India, the son of poor parents, came to the United States at the age of 19 because he was “in love with the ideals of American democracy.”
He worked as a ranch hand on San Bernardino county ranches and then enrolled at UCLA. He was graduated from that university with BA, MA and PhD degrees.
Presently, in addition to his duties as justice of the peace, he also owns and manages several farms.
Saund. a Democrat, will be sponsored tomorrow night by the Westwood Democrat Club.
This will be his only appearance in Southern California before leaving for India where he plans to tell the people there of "the great democracy in America where they can elect a dark- j
skinned man and not a native cies will operate according to to one of the highest offices in1 the manner in which they do in the land.” actual practice.
Trojan Medics Plan Yule Dance at Hilton
Hollinger will interview' potential rie!egaf?s next week, choosing the delegation on the basis of general knowledge of the history, government and international relations of Israel.
Most of the expenses of the delegates will be paid by the university, Hollinger said.
Immediately after the delegation is selected it will begin to hold regular meetings until April in order to brief its members on Israeli problems and to acquaint the'delegates with each other.
Considerable Time
Hollinger cautioned that only students who are willing to spend a considerable amount of time on the project need apply so that the SC delegation can offer another outstanding showing at the annual meeting.
The convention itself will b« handled and treated as a meeting of the UN. with each of the countries playing their respective roles as they do in the real organization.
Each of the Pacific Coast colleges will represent one of the UN’s member countries, Hollinger said.
All of the major organs of the UN and its specialized agcn-
in the afternoon, with a break for lunch. The tests record abili- icy in Asia, ties and interests and take inlo Tonight’s dinner meeting, consideration the realities of which will get underway at 5:15 the world and the type of per- j p.m., is slated for the PiKA
son tested.
house.
The annual Christmas dance presented by the School of Medicine will be held in the ballroom of the Beverly Hilton on Nov. 30 from 9 to 1. Invitations have been issued to faculty, alumni, and students by the Medical Faculty Wives Club and SC Medical Alumni Association, co-sponsors of the affair.
Mrs. Frederick J. Moore of Pasadena, president of the Medical Faculty Wives Club, named Mrs. Jay Freeman Crane as dance co-chairman to serve with Dr. William P. Mikkclsen of the alumni association.
Assisting Mrs. Moore are Mmes. George C. Griffith of La Canada: Peter V. Lee. James McGinnish, and J. Howard Payne, all of Pasadena; George Jacobson: James N. DeLamater of San Marino, and Mrs. Mikkel-sen.
Proceed* to Lounge
George Herron, president of the SC medical student body, is assisting Dr. Mikkelsen with arrangements.
Ivan Scott and his orchestra will play. Proceeds from the dance will go to a fund to provide a student lounge in the p.oposed basic science building.
Many pre-fiance supper parties are beirn bers of the Wives club.
* Dr. and Mrs. Griffith a dinner in the Versai of the Beverlv Hilton
ince supper hosted by i Medical Fa
and Mmes. Rolling Hill Richard S. Marino; All er of Hollyv Jr. of La House of Lr
Robert D. Fj? *: Jerome Fish Cosbv. both < >ert S. Raube <ood: Fremont
Johi
nis, Irvine Moore, Hi Howard P: Edward J.
Angeles. Guests To Attend
W Mehl, James
McG in-Gordon. Frederick J. gh A Edmondson, J. > ne. Peter V’. Lee and Stainbrook. all of Pa-
sadena; Thomas Brem of Ga Grove; Hand Lewis of Altadena; Mrs. Norma Goodhue; Jack j Goodhue.

Senate to Analyze Vote System
By WES GREGORY
A report analyzing the system of electing ASSC Sen-ators-at-large is expected to dominate tomorrow night’s I regular meeting of the ASSC Senate.
The report, which will be presented by Senator Joan i Sparling, will be the result of a survey conducted by the, Elections Investigating Committee into the feasibility ofi continuing the present preference method of electing the, nine Senators-at-Large.
At present. Senators are elected according to the Hare Proportional system of voting which involves the! transference of votes from candidate to candidate until1 nine office seekers receive enough votes to win.
Two meetings ago the Senate ordered its committee to study the system and possibly offer alternatives to it.
ASSC Secretary Barbara Malone will present a report of the campaign she waged in behalf of Hungarian stu-dent-refugees.
Together with other student leaders, Mrs. Malone collected nearly S1000 and secured signatures on 400 protest petitions during the course of her campaign.
The money was sent to aid Hungarian refugees through the auspices of World University Service, working in conjunction with CARE.
The Senate will again hear of the doings of- the newly-organized Trojan Host Committee.
Made up ol eight student leaders, the group will be the official university welcoming committee for visiting athletic teams and student leaders from out-of-town colleges and universities.
Vi Jameson, ASSC vice president, is chairman of the group. She plans to present a progress report of the new Senate committee.
Homecoming Chairman Stan Miller will present a partial report on Homecoming — the expenses involved, things accomplished and a general survey of this year’s Homecoming celebration.
Campus groups which have not turned in organiza-! tion reports to the Senate Recognitions Committee will be refused recognition of the student body.
Committee Chairman Dale Zeigler announced that noon tomorrow is the final deadline for these reports to be turned in to the Dean of Students Office in the Student Union.
After heated debate on this issue, the Senate voted at the last meeting to extend the deadline until tomorrow for the reports.
ASSC President Carl Terzian declared that he would not tolerate additional delay concerning this question.
“I will not entertain another motion to postpone the deadline for these reports,” he said.
Two resolutions will receive Senate consideration tomorrow.
One, by Senator Walt Williams, will express the Senate’s disfavor of conditions in Doheny Memorial Library and will accompany recommendation that the Adminis-I
tration investigate the entire question of poor library service.
This action will be the result of a poll taken by the Daily Trojan of student reaction to present library conditions. Students expressed their disappointment with the library and their disgust for its system of loaning books.
International Relations President Glen Hollinger will present a resolution commending Mrs. Malone for her efforts in the campaign for Hungarian relief.
During the recess Terzian will play a recording made of his speech on desegregation at last summer’s National Students Association Convention.
Terzian’s speech has been recorded along with other* outstanding orations of the meeting and sent to 250 colleges and universities both here and abroad.
The student body president will also give a report of his administration’s accomplishments thus far. This will be the first time in Senate history that such a report has been given.
Southern
DAI LY
TROJAN
VOL. XIVIII
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1956
NO. 46
You Can Win Big Dough; Draw DT Safety Cartoons
$100 Prize Offered Top Cartoonist
One hundred dollars can be garnered by some SC student who has the ability to draw cartoons.
During the week of Dec. 10 to 14, the Daily Trojan will be running cartoons, editorials and features on traffic safety and
accident prevention along with the regular daily campus news and features.
These editions will be sent to the College Newspaper Contest on Safe Driving, sponsored annually by Lumbermen’s Mutual Casualty Co., for cash prizes.
The past three out of four years the DT has taken first place.
First prize for the winning cartoon is S100. All SC students are invited to enter, not only to try to add the $100 to their pocketbook, but also to aid the DT in winning another prize in this annual contest among college newspapers.
Cartoons must be submitted by Dec. 5 to City Editor David , Henley, 432 SU.
Rowites Team Up to Present 'Night on Row’
Complete participation by every social sorority and fraternity at SC will highlight the first annual “International Night on the Row” Wednesday night, Dec. 12.
The “Night on the Row” will find a small group of foreign students at each house for dinner and an informal get acquainted session. The foreign students will contribute to the dinner by bringing a dish of their native land.
According to Maryanne Hamniat, foreign student activities coordinator for the ASSC Social Committee, the dinner is being developed as a result of the highly successful exchange dinners held last year at four houses.
All foreign students who would like to participate in the first annual International night are asked to sign-up for the dinner in the Foreign Student Adviser's office, SU 322 before Friday.
10 to Represent Israel for Troy
WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP
Russ Puppet Asserts Nagy Exiled Because of Communist Murders
BUL )AP1 EST (UP)—Rusj Uan-
backed Hi! insarian Premier Ja-
nos Kadar said last night that
former prc mier Imre Nagy was
exiled luse he allowed the
nmrdci “scores of Commun-
ists.” I aid Nag\ would 1 lave
to :>ta} some t t of the country lor
Kada id the former premier
might be killed by “prov oca-
teurs” if hc returned to Hungary
and th< me would be at tri but-
ed 1o the government. But hc
gave i lositive indicatior i of
Nagy's pres sent whereabouts.
Kada irV statements were the
first olTir ial explanation of
Nagy's ippeararice since tht
govern* announced he had
gone t 0 Ri omania “at his own
request
Kada r m lade the explana tion
In a 3 0-mi nute broadcast < jver
Radio 1 Buds ip2st in reply to de-
Tnands froi ti Hungary's st rike
leaders a face-to-face m eet-
ing wit h N ngy to see for th em-
selves w lie ther he really i s a
free ir tan as 1he Common lists
The Budapest W'orkers Council, claiming to represent 65 per cent of the striking miners and factory workers throughout the country, insisted on a conference with Nagy, their own press, their own workers ‘militia" and distribution of western Red Cross aid to workers.
Kadar said in his broadcast that Nagy had not loft Hungary forever but would be gone “for some time.” He reiterated promises that the former premier would not be pu« on trial.
The puppet premier said Nagy was pushed further and furl her to the right h\ the counter revolutionaries lie tween Oct. 30 and Nov. 3.
“Nagy committed an unfor- ^
giveable crime when, as a result of his lack of ability, he tolerated the murder of scores of Communists by the reactionaries," Kadar said.
“What is worse, he legalized the crimes with his na.ne," he added.
Kadar said Nagy should have resigned as premier at that time, but instead he called for a new uprising. Then, he said. Nagy packed his baggage and hid out in the Yugoslav Embassy.
“By this action, he left Hungarian territory and demonstrated that he did not want to have anything to do with the Hungarian cabinet." Kadar said.
He said Nagy subsequently informed the government through diplomatic channels that he wanted to go abroad.
* * *
LONDON — (IP) — The British goxernmcnt today re-jwtod parliamentary demands that its troops remain in the Suez Canal /.one tu protect British civilians threatened with “rniel and inhuman'’ expulsion hy Egypt.
The British Foreign Office turned down the conservative demands as the Fnited Nations rushed an air-sea built-up of its emergency police force designed to take over as fast as possible from Anglo-French and Israeli occupying forces.
In Port Said, Norwegian troop*, of the F.N. Police Force went on patrol duty In the first active move to replace British and French occupation forces and speed their withdrawal from Egypt.
Canadian Air Force transports took over an expanded airlift that flew 99 more l’.N. soldiers and tons of arms and equipment into the Suez area, j
In Cairo. F.N. Commander Maj. Gen. E. I.. M. Burns announced plans for hundreds of other troops to arrive by sea at Port Said. Burns said he was moving his command headquarters lo the canal zone, where some 1,300 international troops were already gathered for service.
In Port Said. Anglo-French Field Commander Lt. Gen. Sir Hugh Stockwell told newsmen:
“We are working on plans for a withdrawal just as actively as we did for the capture of the Sue/..”
Demands for Anglo-French retaliatory action mounted following widespread reports that an estimated 13.000 Britons, 6.000 French and 50,000 Jewish residents of Egypt hail been ordered expelled.
But British Minister of State Allan Noble turned down calls in the House of Commons tliat Britain retaliate by ousting Egyptians from England and keeping occupation forces in the canal /.one.
“I am sure the House and the country would not wish us to meet barbarism with barbarism,*’ Noble said.
Nohle said, however, the British Foreign Secretary had made the “strongest possible representations’* over the expulsion threat to C.N. Secretary General Dad Mammarsk-jold and the Egyptian goxern-ment.
Noble reiterated Majority Leader R. A. Butler’s statement last week that British forces will withdraw as soon as sufflcien F.N. forces move into the Suez zone.
* * *
BERLIN — The Russians turned hack a west-bound British train at Germany's iron-
curtain norder today in an ominous renewal ol travel curbs like those that started the Soviet blockade of Berlin in 1948.
An American train headed for Berlin was allowed to pass alter a two-hour delay at the border, but only when it appeared the U.S. Army had surrendered to Soviet demands.
No one would say officially just what the Russians are up to, but it appeared they are challenging the right ol the western allies to carry civilians on the trains they operate between Berlin and the west.
British trains were delayed at the border twice last week, and it was reported then that the Russians were insisting that only soldiers, sailors and airmen had the right to ride the allied trains.
United Press Staff Correspondent Ernest J. Cramer was put off the American train today, apparently by Soviet demand.
The train commander told Cramer he would have to leave | tbe train at Marienborn, the So- j viet border check-point, because only servicemen could travel across Soviet Germany to en- | circled Berlin.
The UP correspondent, who was traveling on army orders,
' pointed out that State Depart- j ment officials, newsmen and other Americans accredited to the army in Germany have been riding the allied trains ever since the war.
“That was a mistake," the train commander said. He would give no further details.
British officials said their train was turned back after it had traveled lit) miles across i Soviet-held territory to Marienborn because of "new documen- : tation procedures.” They would give no further details.
Psychological Tests to Tell Trojan Futures
Selecting one job from the 30.000 clearly differentiated types can be quite confusing to j discussion
the college student about to go j weapons and radiation damage out into the world and earn a
Scientist To View Radiation
Claims Atom War Could Destroy Man
By LEONA GOLDSTEIN
Radiation effects from an all-
out nuclear war may mean a death warrant for mankind, according to Dr. James C. Warf of the chemistry department.
Dr. W’arf will discuss his views in a panel discussion on “The Truth About Radiation Damage" Friday at 8 p.m. at the Los Angeles First Unitarian Church Public Forum, 2936 W. 8th St.
Appearing with Professor Warf be Dr. Linus Pauling, Noble Prize winner in 1933 and chairman of the Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering at the California Institute of Technology. Dr. Franklin Stahl, research fellow In biology at Caltech, will complete the panel.
Dangerous After-Effects
The significance of radiation to human beings, born and unborn, will be highlighted at the Testing of nuclear
Openings Will Close On Friday Afternoon
A trip to Palo Alto is the prize offered to 10 SC students who are interested in international affairs—and particularly in Israel, which SC will represent at a model United Nations convention this spring.
Applications are now being taken for delegates to the
| annual Model UN Convention to
DISTRICT 29
Indian Born Congressman To Give Talk
be held at Stanford University, April 10 through 14, next semester.
Deadline for applying for membership on the delegation is Friday at 3 p.m. All students— both graduate and undergraduate—are eligible to apply for the trip.
Blanks Available
Application blanks, which can be secured in 218 SU. should be returned to that office when completed and placed in IR President Glen Hollinger’s mailbox.
living.
Should hc be a clerk or a salesman? A mattress stuffer or a research biologist?
Dr. Alfred Jacobs, associate
to humans in a nuclear war w ill be covered.
Atomic blasts offer dangerous results, according to Dr. Warf. “The immediate effect may be physical damage, but the long range possibilities are even more
professor of psychology and sup- serious. These include patholog-ervisor of vocational guidance, jcaj reaetion to non-reproductive said yesterday that the psycho!- tissue arui genetic damage.” cgv department has arranged
the sreond eductional and vo- ! He asserted that after a blast.
to be radioactive strotium 90 falls to
cational battery of tests given to students at a reduced rate.
Testing Time
The tests will be given Saturday, Dec. 8. at 9 a.m. in the Psychological Service Center,
the earth from the stratosphere. It deposits in plants from which it is eventually taken in by humans.
Division Among Scientists
“Since it’s very similar in
915 W. 37th PI. The charge for1 structure to calcium,” he said, students will be $12. j ‘‘strotium becomes deposited
— . . , j, „ along with calcium in the bones.” Interested students should call i °
‘ ' . , - , r, • J He stressed that this was highly
the Psychological Service Cen-ert S. Raube ne. Peter V’. Lee and Stainbrook. all of Pa-
sadena; Thomas Brem of Ga Grove; Hand Lewis of Altadena; Mrs. Norma Goodhue; Jack j Goodhue.